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ANKARA: PM Vows To Bring Judicial Reform Package To Parliament

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  • ANKARA: PM Vows To Bring Judicial Reform Package To Parliament

    PM VOWS TO BRING JUDICIAL REFORM PACKAGE TO PARLIAMENT

    Today's Zaman
    Feb 23 2010
    Turkey

    PM Erdogan addressed his fellow party members at a dinner in Istanbul
    for the AK Party's Rize provincial branch and Istanbul provincial
    branch leadership on Sunday.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has announced that his Justice and
    Development Party (AK Party) government plans to bring a comprehensive
    judicial reform package to Parliament after government officials put
    the finishing touches on it.

    On Sunday, the prime minister responded to questions from reporters
    at Istanbul Ataturk Airport before leaving for an official visit to
    Spain. When asked whether his government envisions including changes
    to the current judicial system in a constitutional reform package
    planned to be introduced by the government, Erdogan said: "A judicial
    reform is currently expected by most segments of society, including
    political parties and civil society institutions. We don't want to
    leave these expectations unanswered. Our colleagues are working on it.

    They plan to bring it to Parliament after completing their review of
    the package."

    Erdogan also attended a dinner in Istanbul with the AK Party's Rize
    provincial branch and Istanbul provincial branch leadership on Sunday.

    Addressing the participants, the prime minister commented on the
    recent debate over a decision by the Supreme Board of Judges and
    Prosecutors (HSYK) to strip four prosecutors of their authority last
    week. Erdogan implicitly criticized the HSYK, saying some institutions
    damage the notion of the impartiality of the law by overstepping their
    authority. "They are using political discourse. If you like politics,
    here is the stage," he said.

    The HSYK last Wednesday stripped specially authorized Erzurum
    Prosecutor Osman Å~^anal of his authority due to his investigation of
    a chief public prosecutor. The board also relieved another specially
    authorized prosecutor in Erzurum, Tarık Gur, and public prosecutors
    Rasim Karakullukcu and Mehmet Yazıcı of their authority over an
    investigation into Erzincan Chief Public Prosecutor Ä°lhan Cihaner,
    currently under arrest on charges of membership in a terrorist
    organization and falsification of documents. The decision sparked
    indignation in various segments of society as it cast doubt on the
    impartiality and independence of the judiciary.

    The prime minister also lashed out at unidentified parties who accuse
    the government of trying to create a "pro-government" judiciary,
    saying some are trying to cause conflict between state institutions
    by so classifying them.

    Stressing the importance of democracy for Turkey, Erdogan said
    Turkey has been raising the bar in democracy. "Unfortunately,
    those who are jealous of the level Turkey has reached in terms of
    democratization, economy and international relations are staging every
    kind of scenario. There is no way back from this process. Nobody can
    make this country pay a new price. Nobody has the right to take this
    country backwards. We have been fighting the problem of [illegal]
    gangs, which have spread through the country, and we have never
    surrendered," Erdogan said.

    Erdogan also touched upon the newfound solidarity between relatives
    of victims of unsolved murders in Turkey's history. Recently, family
    members of individuals who were assassinated for political reasons
    have voiced their demands that the perpetrators and real masterminds
    behind the killings be brought to justice. Relatives of a number of
    victims of unsolved, suspicious murders attended the last hearing in
    the trial of suspects in the murder of Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian
    journalist fatally shot by an ultranationalist teenager outside the
    Agos weekly in 2007. Stating that there is a heartbreaking problem
    of unsolved murders in Turkey, Erdogan noted that relatives of these
    victims are establishing a platform to voice their demands. "They say
    that they know [their relatives] will not come back, but they want the
    real perpetrators to be brought to justice. Turkey should immediately
    confront this responsibility. There are some who say, 'Why are you
    dredging up the past?' Those who are expected to exert efforts to shed
    light on such events are trying to block this process. I present this
    inconsistency for the judgment of the nation," he added.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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